-->

September, 2009

Friday, September 18th, 2009

09-10 Season Preview: The legend continues…

Warning: Very long and abstract entry ahead!

My blog has had an incredible growth over the off season, and so I know that many of you are new readers that don’t really know what to expect from me during the season. Psycho Lady was really created to be my online diary as a hockey fan. I wanted to show other hockey fans the game through the eyes of a single female alone on the road and getting in to all kinds of trouble. Naturally, I haven’t had the need to post any journal-like entries over the summer since there haven’t been any hockey games for me to go to. Anyway, today is the eve of my hockey season. My NHL action begins tomorrow night with the Flyers and the Leafs!!

If my blog were a TV show, then this would be the part of the season premiere where we revisit what happened at the end of last season so as not to strain the memories of the viewers. The major event of last season was my “mystical six game road trip.” I have alluded to it a few times over the off season, but, truthfully, I clam up whenever people ask me about it or anything relating to my switch to the Phoenix Coyotes. The events of the six game (eleven day) roadie, and all subsequent games, are still detailed in the blog archives, though, I find them terribly embarrassing.

Despite embarrassment, I feel that I need to suck it up, and share my story with you once again, as it will be in the foreground of every hockey game I go to whether I choose to write about it or not. Everything I am, and everything I have (and don’t have) is in this story, and so I know that the only reason I can handle such vulnerability is because I know that you can’t see me. Know that if I were to have to tell you this story face to face, I’d be a deep shade of crimson, glassy-eyed, and stuttering like a nervous moron. An open mind is required for reading this entry, but rest assured that everyone who has heard the story agrees that it is pretty incredible to say the least. Here goes.

I know that there is an overwhelming population out there who don’t believe in psychics or anything of that nature for moral or “scientific” reasons. I will admit that there are lots of hacks out there; “sidewalk psychics” who will read your palm for ten bucks and all that crap. Of course, with any psychic, it’s important to just listen to what is being said and see what happens. After all, you can’t accurately judge a psychic on the spot – you have to wait and see if anything actually comes true.

Back in February 2008, I began to notice a trend with the psychics I was seeing. They had all seen the same thing, and claimed that my “soul mate,””true love,” “destiny” had a connection to Arizona. Arizona seemed like a really bizarre place for me to find romance. It was not on my list of places to visit, and I knew, as the crazy hockey fan I am, that I wouldn’t go there unless it was for hockey. This inevitably brought up the question, “Why the @#$% would I want to go see the @#$%%# Phoenix Coyotes!?!” I decided to just brush it off, and hope for the best, but the same predictions kept coming at me at a faster and faster pace.

By the start of the 08-09 season, I was really beginning to feel like this switch was going to happen even though I desperately didn’t want it to. In my heart, I knew exactly what was going to go down. I started going to more and more games, hoping that I could somehow cheat fate and have this whole Arizona mess averted not only for my sake, but for the sake of all those involved. However, by November, I just accepted it. I pulled up the Coyotes schedule and made out a spread sheet (yes, that’s right, I do that) of possible game plans for the rest of the season should it come to that. The team had a five game eastern kick scheduled in March. This really stuck out to me, and I even highlighted it in a special colour. By Christmas, I had rearranged my finances to support following a Western team instead of an Eastern team – mainly this meant more flights, and less road trips. I was pretty much just waiting for it to happen, but still praying every night that it wouldn’t.

March finally rolled around, and nothing had happened. I was starting to believe that nothing was going to happen. I was on my way to Boston for a game on March 3rd. Boston had really stuck out to me as a place I needed to go, so I made sure I was there for both of my team’s games last season. Anyway, a very odd thing happened when I was packing for the trip. I was only going to be gone for two days, but I packed like I was going to be gone for two weeks. I know this is normal for a lot of girls, but this was really out of character for me. Aside from bringing a spare shirt and pair of socks, I’m usually a really light packer. For absolutely no reason at all, I just kept piling clothes into that suitcase.

The day after the game, I was sitting in Logan International waiting for boarding. I had arrived extra early that day because I wanted to have my flight moved up. They were going to charge me more than what I already paid for the ticket to move it up a few hours, so I promptly said, “Fuck that!” and decided to catch up on some studying. After I finished reading one of the books, I began thinking about the Arizona business again. It was the NHL trade deadline, and I knew deep down that a trade was the key to me switching to Phoenix. I was thinking about how lucky I was that the trade didn’t happen, but I suppose I spoke (thought) too soon.

At that moment, my phone went off. A friend that I hadn’t spoken to in months was texting me to inform me of a trade – THE trade. I jumped out of my seat knowing that this was THE moment, that my time had arrived. I had to act. I had to do something, but I didn’t know what. Suddenly, another text came through, “They play in Buffalo on Friday.” The light bulb went off – my spreadsheet, the eastern kick! The Coyotes must have been on that very road trip! I threw open my suitcase, grabbed my lap top, and quickly found my way over to the Coyotes website. “Next game @ Boston.”

I started to pace around the airport. Something had to be done. I had always said that I didn’t know if I could handle switching teams at random. I wanted to have a flawless transition so it didn’t look like I just abandoned one team for the other. Here I was in Boston while receiving word that I needed to be in Boston – an odd coincidence to say the least. Anyway, I was pacing and I had naturally turned bright red. My brain was saying, “Sit down. Let’s talk this out rationally,” But every other part of me was racing at top speed toward the exit sign.

No matter what you believe about psychics, I think even the biggest skeptics will agree that if a prediction came to fruition, they would probably still act on it. I always use the example of the lottery ticket. If someone or multiple someones kept telling you that you were going to win $27M in the lottery from a ticket you bought at a specific vendor, would you not buy that ticket if you found yourself standing in the doorway of that store even if it was a year later? I think we both know that you’d happily hand over that $2!

My mom used to always say that she didn’t need to have a son because I practically am one. I’ve never been overly girly; never did that whole girl’s night crap like watching chick flicks and reruns of the heinous trolls on Sex and the City. Anyway, my point is that I’ve never had these fairytale, silver screen romantic notions. But at the same time, I was not much for dating around. I always felt like I’d know when something was right, and, unlike some people, I’m not cruel enough to lead someone on. I don’t want to hurt anyone, but at the same time I don’t want to get trapped with the wrong person. I don’t think I’ve ever agreed to a second date in my entire life for that very reason. Maybe this is the wrong approach to take in life, but it has been my approach to this point.

Trembling from a sudden fever at Logan International, I was at my crossroad. Do I take the safe route, turn back, and wonder what could have been? Or do I put my own life on pause in pursuit of the man of my dreams who may or may not exist? For someone who never had love as a top priority this was a major change for me. I would say that this event turned me into a girl pretty damn fast because there was no doubt in my mind about what was the right thing to do. All I knew was that if this person was really linked to this event, then I would do anything for him anyway – the only catch was that I didn’t know him yet. This was by far the most romantic gesture I’ve ever done.

***I feel that it is important for me to stress that I am not under the impression that I am necessarily meant to be with someone who plays for the Coyotes. I see the trade more as a catalyst, but I do know that this person could be anyone. Besides, I doubt there is a hockey player out there man enough to handle someone like me. There is a reason they date fake girls with fake boobs.***

Like I said, I ran like hell toward the exit sign, and hopped in the first cab that would take me back to the hotel. I lied my way out of exams, convinced professors to give me extensions on papers, and went completely AWOL. My family allegedly resorted to tracking my location on my blog, and tried to figure out why I was going from Boston to Buffalo, Long Island, Detroit, and Newark. I didn’t know what to expect, but I knew that my best bet was to shadow the Coyotes road trip until I figured things out.

Deep down, I think I was hoping for lightning to strike as soon as I found myself back in my seat at TD Banknorth Garden. But nothing was immediately obvious to me. On top of it, my stress levels were through the roof. You can only imagine how uncomfortable it is to know that you are being completely insane and going to hockey games for less than admirable reasons. I have never felt more vulnerable in my entire life. My heart was exposed for all to see and that made me want to die. It also made me overly sensitive when I encountered dick moves in Buffalo, and extreme dick moves in Anaheim. I felt like I was being completely slaughtered. I had risked so much to be there for whoever it was, and I was being abused to the point that I was starting to regret ever taking the chance in the first place.

The interesting thing was that whenever there was a sign of trouble, another sign of encouragement would immediately follow in its place. After a horrible game in Buffalo, I found myself in Long Island wishing that I didn’t already have the tickets for the game and thinking that I should have just given up back in Boston. Nassau Coliseum really gave me my first positive reinforcement to keep on track. I had miserably wandered into the little girls’ room when one of those ugly metal framed advertisements stopped me in my tracks. I felt like I was being physically held in front of the sign until I understood it. It was an ad for immigration to Scottsdale. At first I didn’t think anything of it. It didn’t seem out of place to me, until I realized that I wasn’t in Phoenix –I was in Long Island. I knew then that I had to go to Arizona, and made sure to book a stay in Scottsdale before the season ended.

As the Coyotes games continued, I felt myself really starting to crack under the pressure. Trust me, you don’t know stress until you’ve experienced a saga like this. The game in Anaheim was a total disaster. I was finally broken. I gave up. I couldn’t do it anymore; I couldn’t handle the constant hi-sticking to my heart and my ego. The problem was Phoenix was still booked. I was scheduled to touch down for the last game of the season. I decided that I would give it one more shot, but that I wouldn’t go to anything else until that game.

Phoenix finally came around, and it was a really great game. Apart from discovering that Arizona men seemed to be all over my stuff to the point that they sprint after me down the street, my mystery man still remained a mystery. Now I was facing a very long off season, and I still had no answers or any clue as to where to go from there.

I didn’t like the idea of having six months to agonize over the value of my recent decisions. So, I decided to take matters into my own hands and try to rule out or confirm the most likely candidates for the position of mystery man. It has been a long summer of nerves resulting from setting myself up for rejection over and over again; and not just any rejection, the worst kind – MySpace rejection. You can only imagine the bitterness one would feel after all this drama. I risked my financial security, my education, my job for this, and for what? My heart is starting to feel like scar tissue.

So, I found myself back at square one. Coming into the 2009-10 season, I had to decide if this melodrama was worth all the suffering it was causing me emotionally. After a very long internal struggle, I decided that I would keep following the path with the Arizona team. If I was meant to do this, then I better keep at it (at least while I can still bear it.) I am a hockey fan first and foremost. I can’t live without it, and no matter what, I will end up on crazy road trips to see one team or another. So, my team might as well be the team with my own personal legend attached to it. Like I said, if I’m supposed to do this, then I better just do it. As Gretzky said, “You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” (HA! Totally lame, but I said it anyway!)

To lighten the mood, the top photo is my first picture from the 2009-10 NHL season. The eve before Flyers@Leafs. I never got a picture of the Alps while I was in Switzerland, so here is my attempt to fool you with my fox-like abilities. Small things amuse me.

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

And so resume my hockey anxiety dreams.


My aunt used to tell me that nightmares about missing a university exam would haunt me for the rest of my life. Truthfully, I never had those. I’m not “normal,” after all. Instead, I have terrifying dreams about being late for, or completely missing, hockey games. There is nothing scarier to a hockey fan than to arrive at the top of his or her section and look down at the ice and discover that the puck is already in play; to know that precious moments of the game were missed sitting in traffic or standing in line for a beer. It’s definitely one of the worst feelings in the world, and it frequently haunts my dreams. The good news is that once the hockey anxiety dreams kick in, it’s a sure sign that the hockey season must be right around the corner. Last weekend, I had my first hockey nightmare of the 2009-10 season. It went a little something like this.

My new baby (car) was parked outside of this very large, mansiony house. The unsettling thing is that a few days later I found myself parked in front of this very house, yet I had never seen the house before. I loaded my stuff in the trunk and got in the driver’s seat to take off. I maybe drove two feet before my car was attacked by a barrage of women in dresses. It was the wives. The beasts. I’m not sure which team they belonged to, but they were unmistakably hockey wives. They surrounded my car and told me that I could not leave until I helped them with their outfits. I rolled my eyes at them, but got out of the car, locked it, and stomped back into the house.

After a few moments, I was able to escape the wretched creatures. I dashed out of the house only to see that my car was no longer on the street. It had been stolen. Naturally, my first thought was not, “Oh @#$%! Someone stole my car!” It was, “Oh @#$%! How the @#$% am I supposed to get to Pittsburgh now?!” (Pittsburgh is my first regular season hockey destination this year.) I was in a panic, but I tried to remain calm. I ran back into the bordello of hockey wives, and frantically contacted Globali, the alleged tracking system that I have in the car in the event of its theft. All they could tell me was that my car was still in the country, but every time I asked what could be done to retrieve it, the operator either gave me a sketchy ambiguous reply, or dead silence. There was definitely a conspiracy afoot.

I set off on a quest to Globali to use brute force against them until they retrieved my car! I only had a matter of days before the Coyotes and the Penguins were set to face off at Mellon Arena – the clock was ticking. Globali was set in the back of this wooded park. I see this park in a lot of my “quest” dreams, yet, as far as I know, it’s not a real place. Anyway, I found the Globali cabin, and started barking orders at the woman working inside.

She went to check on the location of the car on an old school looking computer. She turned back from the screen with a strange look in her eye, and that same sketchy response that the others had given me on the phone. My blood was really starting to boil, so I had to put on my best bad cop routine, and get up in her face as menacingly as possible and demand that she tell me where the car was. Suddenly, I heard a voice whispering to her from the computer screen telling her that she was not permitted to tell me where the car was…or else.

It was the Christmas Carol version of Mickey Mouse who was controlling the minds of the Globali workers. It was suddenly clear that keeping me from hockey was a large scale Disney Corporation evil conspiracy. Were the Ducks behind this? (Yes, I’m aware Disney sold the team four years ago). I was suddenly overwhelmed by the magnitude of the situation, and, out of frustration, attempted to snap the Globali woman out of it by hurling a deck of tarot cards at her head. I am disturbed by the loaded symbolism attached to this weapon of choice. Anyway, I hit her square in the forehead (they didn’t call me the Bionic Arm in junior A for nothing!), but it was no use.

The rest of the dream was a whirlwind of dizzying frustration, silent screams, and panic over what was to become of me and hockey. I was still distressed when I woke up, so I ran to the front door, and looked out the window to see if my car was still in the driveway. It was, but there are still a few weeks before I leave for Pittsburgh – anything can happen.

P.S. If there are any psychiatrists out there making an assessment of my mental health based on this dream, then I should remind you that my blog is called Psycho Lady. Consider that your disclaimer.

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Top 10 Tuesday: Wicked hockey stuff.

Today’s Top 10 list compiles an assortment of random, neat hockey related things that you may or may not have known existed (unless, of course, you follow me on Twitter). #1 is obviously my favourite! I don’t feel so bad about missing Chippendales in Vegas during the NHL Awards Week anymore *tee hee.* Special thanks to the hardcore ‘Yotes fan who showed it to me! ;o)

10. Hockey Tarot Cards


For all the hockey mediums out there. I am assuming this is the Seven of Wands.

9. Wedding Favours


Hockey and I gave these out at our wedding. I’m only kidding, of course. Hockey and I didn’t have a proper wedding. We had a quick and dirty exchange of vows at a chapel in old Las Vegas.

8. Shatter Puck Car Decal


I saw this on a car once during one of my hockey adventures and I thought it was sweet. Also available in team pucks, but they aren’t as nice.

7. Camouflage Jersey


Lurking in the bushes behind the practice facility has never been easier! Check out more crazy jerseys at BradHall.com

6. Flyers Fuzzy Dice


Fuzzy dice are the best and most tackilicious way to assert one’s hockey allegiance. Check out, Fuzzy Dice: A speed demon’s best friend, to read about how my Flyers dice saved me from a speeding ticket in New York. Be careful driving through enemy territory with these, though. I nearly got shot in New Jersey for having them in my car!

5. Shooting From The Lip: Hockey’s Best Quotes and Quips (Chris McDonell)


Not gonna lie, I own this book. Best Line: Every time I see you naked, I feel sorry for your wife! – Jaromir Jagr to Matt Barnaby

4. Nike Goalie Commercial Series

The greatest hockey commercials ever made. This is my favourite installment from Nike’s old hockey series! “Are you Swedish, sir?”

3. Tuxedo Jersey


This jersey says like, “I want to be formal, but I also like to party.” I like to party, so I like my jersey to party. Check out more crazy jerseys at BradHall.com

2. The Hockey Sweater (Roch Carrier)


The greatest book and short film of all time. Carrier captures the raw essence of our game like no other hockey writer before him or after. You can watch the entire classic Canadian Film Board adaptation here (renamed,The Sweater).

1. Rare Footage of Coyotes Players Trying to Raise Money for the Financially Struggling Organization.

Try JibJab Sendables® eCards today!

My new favourite thing! For the record, I did not make this video, but I would pay GOOD money to see it live. Just something to consider if the Coyotes need a get rich quick scheme. P.S. Sometimes I squeal when I watch this.

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

Hockey Anecdote #45634758: How my Mom found out I went to the 2009 IIHF World Championship.


Flying off to Switzerland for hockey was pretty crazy even by my standards. So crazy, that, out of shame, I decided not to tell anyone that I was going. OK, I’m not completely stupid! I did keep two friends abreast of my location and contact info via Facebook messages in the event of my disappearance. But as far as everyone else was concerned, I was at the (more believable) Flyers/Pens series during round one of the NHL playoffs.

For months nobody suspected a thing, until a careless mistake let the cat out of the bag…literally. I was visiting my parents in Waterloo (a.k.a RIM/Blackberry/Balsillie Mecca for those of you engrossed in the Phoenix drama), when a receipt from Zurich fell out of my purse. That’s right, I don’t clean out my purse. I didn’t notice that this happened, and went to bed for the night. The next morning my Mom was set on attack mode:

Mom: WHEN WERE YOU IN GERMANY!?!
Me: Umm… you tell me, you were there. (I was born in Germany)
Mom: I found THIS *shows receipt* on the kitchen table. It has your name on it and it’s in German.
Me: I wasn’t in Germany.
Mom: It says Zurich on it!
Me: Zurich isn’t in Germany.
Mom: Yes it is!!
Me: No, it’s not *tries to think of a reason to run out of the room*
[Pause: 5…4…3…2…1…]
Mom: SWITZERLAND! Why did you go to Switzerland?! I saw that the date was on my birthday and I remembered that you were away that weekend!

Relax, we weren’t celebrating her birthday that weekend. Do you think I’d miss my own mother’s birthday? Actually, I was in Columbus for Christmas, and Phoenix for Easter, so, yes, I probably would. Anyway, I was busted. But in all honesty, I dropped hints like a crazy mofo! I bought her birthday card while I was in Zurich. It had a picture of an angry looking bird on it, so, naturally, it reminded me of mother. Apart from the card saying Zurich on the back, I had written the entire inscription in German. How did I manage this you ask? Well, I had an interesting conversation with the manager of the card store, and asked him to teach me all the Swiss-German swear words. After a solid twenty minutes of brainstorming we managed to wish her a happy birthday in the most drawn out and obscene way possible.

Mom (reading card): Um…doesn’t this word mean “pig?”

Yes, it does.

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Top 10 Tuesday: Most memorable hockey jams.

YAY, another music related Top 10 Tuesday! To clarify, this is the Top 10 list of SOME songs that I most associate with my hockey experience for whatever reason. Give me a break, I can’t control what my mind associates with random music. This is not a list of essential hockey songs or even essential road trip songs. This list doesn’t even mention some of the albums I never leave home without like, Guns N’ Roses (Appetite for Destruction), Metallica (black album), Kings of Leon (Only by the Night), Kanye West (Graduation), Nirvana (Unplugged in New York), Heart (The Essential Heart – didn’t see that one coming, did you?), just to name a few. You also won’t find bands that you are guaranteed to hear at the rink like Stompin’ Tom Connors, or, for Toronto fans, Nickelback to no end. Enjoy!

10. Chris Isaac – Wicked Games

In high school, normal people sit in class and pass notes to each other, but my friends were not normal people. My friends used to sit in class and draw pictures and make up “spicy stories” about the local junior hockey team. Between periods, they’d catch me in the hallway or by the lockers and give me their latest creations. I really don’t know what the motive behind these pictures was. Anyway, years later, living in Toronto, I was going through a box of my old trophies and awards, when I came across a blue folder. In it were dozens of pictures, and stories, and even a homemade flag that the girls had made for me back in grade eleven. Rereading the stories made me laugh because in some of the steamier scenes music was used to set the mood. Wicked Games by Chris Isaac was the most popular choice, but other tracks included, George Michael (Father Figure, Careless Whisper), and Smashing Pumpkins (Ava Adore, Eye).

9. Border Cross/Country

Back in the day, we used to have this tradition that involved us insuring that country music was on the second we crossed the border into the States for our hockey road trips. Not sure why, but I think as 19 year olds we reasoned that country music is American, and we were in America. Usually we played Gretchen Wilson’s Here for the Party, but eventually Save a Horse Ride a Cowboy (Big and Rich) became a popular choice, and even made it on to the Philly ’07 soundtrack. Which reminds me of a text conversation I had with my mom while I was in Calgary. Me: I see cowboys! Mom: Don’t save any horses.

8. Def Leppard, Hysteria

Back during the NHL Lock Out I had to resort to supporting the next best thing in the American Hockey League. On a trip to Cleveland, Ohio to see the, then, Barons take on the Milwaukee Admirals at the Quicken Loans Arena, I was already beginning to burn through my list of people willing to go on hockey trips with me. I had to resort to scouting from the bottom of the barrel, and by that I mean I had to take my sister (that’s right, Alex!). She was still in elementary school at the time, and in her Japanese phase. Thus, she would only listen to odd metal from Japan and nothing else. She even listened to it on her iPod while she miserably watched the hockey game – who does that!? (She had only come along because she wanted to go shopping.) Naturally, being the older sister, I had to make it my mission to irritate her mercilessly during the entire five hour car ride. This involved me fully blasting Def Leppard’s Hysteria while dramatically singing along and busting out the finest upper body dance moves you’ve ever seen. If that didn’t annoy her enough, I deviated from Def Leppard every once in a while to play My Humps by the Black Eyed Peas, and ONLY My Humps! Fave Tracks: Women, Pour Some Sugar on Me, Armageddon It

7. Justin Timberlake, Future Sex/Love Sounds

Justin always seems to be in the car whenever I need to flee a situation. Initially, this album reminds me of fleeing Nashville in a great haste after an unpleasant evening locked away (in fear) in my hotel room, after a would-be John attempted to do God-knows-what to me for a(hopefully very large) fee re: Will NOT have sex for carbs or money! I think it was in my attempt to make myself feel better after such a startling night that made me turn to Mr. Timberlake’s music until Nashville disappeared in my rearview mirror. Coincidentally, SexyBack seems to be the theme song to all of my hockey related dramas and shady activities. Fave Tracks: FutureSex/LoveSound, SexyBack, Chop Me Up

6. A Night at the Roxbury soundtrack

There was a time when this soundtrack never left my car. This was the time before I started flying to my further games, and would find myself driving for twelve plus hours overnight. Generally, I would listen to poppy, fun music when I needed to stay awake. Now I’m just so used to not sleeping that I could really listen to anything and be wired for weeks. One night around four AM, while we were en route to Milwaukee for an Admirals game, we approached a toll booth somewhere around Chicago with the soundtrack blaring. We were all really hyper! I’ll never forget the look on the toll worker’s face when he saw what appeared to be a skuzzy, mobile dance club pulling up to his window. Fave Tracks: This is Your Night, What is Love?, A Little Bit of Ecstasy.

5. Britney Spears, Blackout

Like most people, the first time I heard Blackout I thought it sounded like monotonous garbage. However, my friend insisted that it was actually good, and forced me to listen to it non-stop during a November 2007 road trip to Philadelphia. I have to admit that I quickly became addicted to Britney’s crazy period album, and am instantly reminded of the Flyers and life on the road the second I hear it. Consequentially, all Philly roadies were tag lined It’s Philly, Bitch after that trip (re: Gimme More). I even have a humourous misheard lyric from her song, Toy Soldier, that I cannot for the life of me sing correctly. The line is, “I’m like a fire bottle bustin’ in your face.” Except I don’t hear “fire bottle,” I hear “Flyer.” I know, so vile, right? Anyway, my co-pilots have also noticed that I drive faster when this song is on, and put the song on repeat whenever I have to hightail it to a game. Fave Tracks: Toy Soldier, Break the Ice, Gimme More, I Got A Plan (Get Naked), Perfect Lover (uh huh uh huh uh huh uh huuuuuuh)

4. Bush(X), Sixteen Stone

Sixteen Stone is one of those amazing albums that you completely forget about until you stumble upon it while going through your old CD collection. Back when Bush first began, they had copyright problems in Canada because a Canadian band named Bush already existed. For years, Bush was known as Bush X in Canada until the other band allowed them to have the name just prior to the release of their third album. I don’t know about you, but I personally think Bush X is WAY more bad ass, but whatever. I don’t know if it’s worth anything, but my copies of Sixteen Stone and Razorblade Suitcase have Bush X on them. Anyway, back to hockey. This album has left one of those vivid imprints on my memory that immediately makes me recall driving around Detroit (Big Beaver Road *Beavis and Butthead laugh*) for my very first NHL solo roadie to see the Preds take on the Red Wings in 2006. I was really nervous for that game, and the fact that I was by myself. It was another one of those big moments that changed the way my game was played forever. Fave Tracks: Everything Zen, Comedown, Little Things, Machinehead, Glycerine.

3. Avril Lavigne – Girlfriend

On our inaugural trip to Philadelphia, my friend made a two disc compilation in honour of the momentous occasion. The playlist included a variety of gems from Dick in a Box to Layla. However, she also included a few tracks that irritated me to no end like the one mentioned above. After our first game at Wachovia Center, we somehow found ourselves lost and on a continuous circuit around the airport. My friend decided to taunt me with Avril Lavigne’s Girlfriend which only contributed to the irritation level of the situation. It became the driving equivalent of circus music. Every time I saw the exit, I would miss it for some ridiculous reason. I quickly changed the lyrics to “Hey, hey, you, you, I don’t like your airport! No way, no way, I think you need a new one!” After spending a good forty-five minutes trapped around the airport, Avril’s terrible song is probably the first song I think of when I remember my time in Philadelphia. P.S. How did I manage to miss this song in Top 10 Tuesday: Puck bunny music at the office?

2. Super Cool Junior Hockey Gangsta Mix

Growing up in Kitchener there are really only two things to do if you are underage – hang out at the Tim Horton’s and go cruising up and down King Street. Our post Rangers game tradition involved walking over to Timmy Ho’s on Ottawa, grabbing a hot chocolate and a toasted coconut donut, then heading out for a drive around town with the windows down and the “tunes” blasting! Of course, in high school, the only music worth blasting is intrusive “deep thug” (I coined that term). Such tracks included: Xzibit (Get Your Walk On), 50 Cent (In Da Club, If I Can’t), Nelly (Pimp Juice, On the Grind), Ludacris (Game Got Switched I hate it when there are too many rookies, not enough pros!, Southern Hospitality), Cam’Ron (What Means the World to You), N.E.R.D (Lap Dance), etc. We would occasionally change up the pace and throw on a couple Nsync slow jams (This I Promise You) to embarrass ourselves. On one evening of post game cruising, we were being followed by another car which turned out to be carrying none other than the players themselves! Back then I was never one to back down from a challenge to race. That was before Ontario approved immediate loss of licence for reckless speeding, and I realized my whole hockey livelihood would be at risk! Needless to say, I smoked ‘em.

1. Coldplay, A Rush of Blood to the Head

Milwaukee was my very first non-OHL road trip, and being a massive event for the future of my hockey addiction, its soundtrack is the most memorable. At the time, I was listening to a lot of Coldplay. That was long before the band started to irritate me with their new stuff – ugh, Viva La Vida and other douchey songs that make me want to slit my wrists. I do like Violet Hill, though. Anyway, Coldplay’s album, A Rush of Blood to the Head makes me immediately remember driving around the Brew on my off night in town while a massive snowstorm was just beginning (we ended up getting three feet that night). I can still see the snow swirling around on the pavement as if I were there right now in the dead of January. Perhaps, my memory of this night is so vivid for another reason. Maybe it was a foreshadow to my life that I’m supposed to remember. The night before, I saw my first game at the Bradley Center. The Admirals were taking on the San Antonio Rampage (now affiliated with the Phoenix Coyotes). The night after this incident, I saw my second and last game of the trip wherein the Ads played host to the Hamilton Bulldogs. Do you see the connection? I guess we’ll know more about this by week’s end! Fave Tracks: A Rush of Blood to the Head, The Scientist, Warning Sign.

Bonus Track: Arctic Monkeys – Do Me A Favour

It’s the beginning of the end. The car went up the hill and disappeared around the bend. This song was the overall theme song from the 08-09 hockey season. I was listening to it a lot after Christmas when I knew that I was going to switch teams to Phoenix at some point in the near future. Other awesome tracks by the Arctic Monkeys: 505, Teddy Picker, Still Take You Home, Dancing Shoes, Mardy Bum

    • Psycho Lady: That does sound good! And Nashville is definitely ...
    • Sinbin: Girl, I've been there and back, so trust me, I kno...
    • Psycho Lady: It only counts if I've been there for a game. If i...
    • T: You should try and hit the last 4 arenas to see a ...
    • Jim: Well this is interesting, guess you have to do wha...

    Powered by WordPress

    Blossom Theme by RoseCityGardens.com